An imput signal is provided in polar format comprising an amplitude component (210) and a phase component (212). The amplitude component (210) is supplied to a pulse width modulator (219) which derives pulse width modulated (PWM) signal. The PWM signal is used to control a switch (224) which modulates the phase component (212). The modulated phase component (212) is amplified at (216). The output of amplifier (216) has a desired envelope, as dictated by the PWM signal, whose characteristics are, in turn, derived from the amplitude component (210). Either or both of the amplitude component (210) and the phase component (212) can be predistorted (226, 218).
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12. A method of amplifying an input signal to produce an output signal, comprising the steps of:
(a) providing the input signal in polar form comprising an amplitude component and a phase component; (b) modulating the phase component with a pulse width modulated (PWM) signal derived from the amplitude component; and (c) amplifying the modulated phase component to produce the output signal, wherein the modulating comprises configuring a switch to selectively supply the phase component to be amplifier.
1. An apparatus for amplifying an input signal provided in polar format comprising amplitude and phase components to produce an output signal, the apparatus comprising an amplifier and a modulator, wherein the modulator modulates the phase component with a pulse width modulated (PWM) signal derived from the amplitude component and the amplifier receives the modulated phase component for amplification to produce the output signal, wherein the modulator comprises a switch configured to selectively supply the phase component to the amplifier.
17. An apparatus for amplifying an input signal provided in polar format comprising amplitude and phase components to produce an output signal, the apparatus comprising:
an amplifier; a modulator, wherein the modulator modulates the phase component with a pulse width modulated (PWM) signal derived from the amplitude component and the amplifier receives the modulated phase component for amplification to produce the output signal, wherein the input signal is provided in quadrature format; and a converter configured to convert the quadrature signal into a polar signal.
16. An apparatus for amplifying an input signal provided in polar format comprising amplitude and phase components to produce an output signal, the apparatus comprising:
an amplifier; a modulator, wherein the modulator modulates the phase component with a pulse width modulated (PWM) signal derived from the amplitude component and the amplifier receives the modulated phase component for amplification to produce the output signal; and a linearization scheme for counteracting distortion in the apparatus, wherein a feedback signal from the amplifier output is used to provide adaptive control of the linearization scheme.
19. An apparatus for amplifying an input signal provided in polar format comprising amplitude and phase components to produce an output signal, the apparatus comprising:
an amplifier; a modulator, wherein the modulator modulates the phase component with a pulse width modulated (PWM) signal derived from the amplitude component and the amplifier receives the modulated phase component for amplification to produce the output signal, wherein the input signal is provided as a channel of amplitude modulation information and a channel of phase modulation information; and a converter configured to derive the amplitude and phase components from the channels of amplitude and phase modulation information, respectively.
15. An apparatus for amplifying an input signal provided in polar format comprising amplitude and phase components to produce an output signal, the apparatus comprising:
an amplifier; a modulator, wherein the modulator modulates the phase component with a pulse width modulated (PWM) signal derived from the amplitude component and the amplifier receives the modulated phase component for amplification to produce the output signal; and a linearization scheme for counteracting distortion in the apparatus, wherein: the linearization scheme is a predistortion scheme for predistorting the input signal; and the predistortion scheme comprises a predistorter for the amplitude component of the input signal. 2. The apparatus of
3. The apparatus of
4. The apparatus of
5. The apparatus of
6. The apparatus of
7. The apparatus of
8. The apparatus of
9. The apparatus of
10. The apparatus of
11. The apparatus of
13. The method of
14. The apparatus of
the converter is adapted to generate a digital phase component of the polar signal; and the apparatus further comprises: a digital delay adapted to delay the digital phase component in a digital domain; and an analog delay adapted to delay, in an analog domain, an analog phase component generated from the delayed digital phase component. 18. The apparatus of
the converter is adapted to generate a digital phase component of the polar signal; and the apparatus further comprises: a digital delay adapted to delay the digital phase component in a digital domain; and an analog delay adapted to delay, in an analog domain, an analog phase component generated from the delayed digital phase component. |
1. Field of the Invention
The invention relates to amplifiers and methods for amplifying signals, and in particular to amplification of a signal provided in terms of polar components.
2. Description of the Related Art
The use of envelope restoration in a linear transmitter (or envelope elimination and restoration--EER--in the case of an amplifier), as an efficiency boosting mechanism, has been proposed. The essence of the technique is to utilise high efficiency RF amplifiers (e.g. class-C, D or E) and to apply the required envelope variations by modulating the amplifier supply. Assuming that this varying high power supply can be supplied with appropriate high efficiency, then the technique is capable of very high levels of overall DC-RF power conversion efficiency. The mechanism for supplying this high power envelope is therefore critical to the process.
The constant-envelope, phase-modulated signal S2 is then amplified by a high efficiency RF amplifier 100, e.g. of class-C, D or E. This will preserve the phase modulation information and transmit it to the output of the system. The baseband amplitude modulation signal S1 is amplified by a suitably efficient audio amplifier 110, or is used to feed a pulse-width modulator with subsequent class-D power amplification. Finally, the resulting high power audio signal is used to modulate the collector or power supply of RF amplifier 100. This high-level modulation process restores the signal envelope to the output of amplifier 100 and, assuming that the relevant delays between the two paths conveying signals S1 and S2 are suitably equalised, results in a high power replica Vout=GS1(t)S2(t) of the input signal being produced at the output.
There are several main sources of intermodulation distortion in the type of amplifier shown in FIG. 1. These are the bandwidth of the envelope modulator (e.g. a class-S amplifier), the differential delay between the signals S1 and S2, AM-PM conversion in amplifier 100 (when being high-level amplitude modulated), "encoding" error in the high-level modulator (i.e. errors between the actual and ideal response of the modulator at a given input amplitude level), and cut-off occurring in the amplifier 100 at low envelope levels.
The invention aims to reduce some or all of these forms of distortion and thereby provide more linear amplification.
According to one aspect, the invention provides apparatus for amplifying an input signal to produce an output signal, comprising means for providing the input signal in polar format comprising amplitude and phase components, amplifying means and modulating means, wherein the modulating means modulates the phase component with a pulse width modulated (PWM) signal derived from the amplitude component and the amplifying means receives the modulated phase component for amplification to produce the output signal.
According to another aspect, the invention provides a method of amplifying an input signal to produce an output signal, comprising providing the input signal in polar form comprising an amplitude component and a phase component, modulating the phase component with a pulse width modulated (PWM) signal derived from the amplitude component and amplifying the modulated phase component to produce the output signal.
Unlike the conventional EER technique of
Where a PWM signal is used to restore the bandwidth of an amplified signal, the intermodulation distortion (IMD) level of the overall amplification system is directly related to the "over sampling" rate of the PWM process relative to the bandwidth of the envelope signal (i.e. the amplitude component of the input signal). The oversampling rate should generally be at least 10 times, but can advantageously be increased to 50 or 100 times in order to achieve high linearity (over 60 dBc in theory). It is much easier to achieve a high sampling rate using the invention with a low power PWM signal and a switching process.
In traditional EER systems, such as that shown in
In the amplification system of
Advantageously, the modulating means comprises switching means for selectively supplying the phase component to the amplifier, the switching action of the switching means being controlled by the PWM signal, thereby modulating the phase component with the PWM signal.
A linearisation scheme may be employed to counteract distortion in the system. In a preferred embodiment, the input signal can be predistorted to counter distortion in the system. Either the amplitude or phase component of the input signal or both may be predistorted. Predistortion of the phase component of the input signal assists in the further reduction of AM-PM distortion, such as may be introduced by the switching action of the switch means.
Where a linearisation scheme is employed, it is possible to use a feedback signal from the amplifier output to provide adaptive control of the linearisation scheme.
The provision of the input signal in amplitude and phase components will depend upon the nature of the input signal received by the system. For example, the input signal may comprise two baseband channels conveying phase and amplitude modulation information respectively. The amplitude channel may be used directly as the amplitude component by a PWM process (possibly subsequent to predistortion) to generate the PWM signal. The baseband phase channel can be modulated onto a carrier signal using, for example, a voltage control oscillator (VCO) to generate the phase component which is selectively supplied to the amplifier.
Alternatively, the input signal may comprise a quadrature format signal or an amplitude and phase modulated signal, either of which may be used to produce the amplitude and phase components.
By way of example only, certain embodiments of the invention will now be described with reference to the accompanying figures, in which:
In the following description, elements common to more than one of the described amplifier configurations retain the same reference numerals and the description of their function will not be repeated.
The amplifier configuration 200 of
The phase channel 212 directly modulates a VCO 214 or frequency synthesiser (which may incorporate up or down conversion to the final carrier or system frequency), for subsequent amplification by a non-linear RF amplifier 216. The phase channel is predistorted by predistorter 218 in order to counteract the effects of AM-PM distortion occurring in the system. The envelope dictated by the amplitude channel 210 is imposed upon the final output signal by means of a pulse width modulation (PWM) process 219 applied to the phase-modulated RF output of the VCO 214.
The PWM process 219 uses the standard technique of comparing the amplitude modulation information on the amplitude channel 210 with a high frequency triangular waveform produced by generator 220. The result of the comparison is a binary signal 222 whose waveform has a duty cycle dependent upon the amplitude information conveyed by the amplitude channel 210, i.e. the binary signal 222 comprises a train of pulses whose width depends upon the amplitude indicated on channel 210 relative to the triangular waveform. There are other methods of implementing the PWM process, notably involving the use of DSP, field programmable gate array (FPGA) or erasable programmable read only memory (EPROM)-based look-up table techniques, any of which could be applied in place of process 219.
The binary signal 222 is used to control a high speed RF switch 224. The state of switch 224 changes each time the binary signal 222 changes levels. The switch 224 imposes the PWM waveform of the binary signal 222 onto the phase modulated RF signal output by VCO 214. The switch 224 could be implemented as a PIN diode or a FET series switch and may thus be a power-efficient component. The rapid switching action of switch 224 and its effect on the non-linear amplifier 216 introduces AM-PM distortion to the system, but this is countered by predistorter 218.
The PWM process 219 may contain some degree of non-linearity and hence some form of linearisation may be required. However, process 219 will be more linear than, say the RF input/output transfer characteristic of a class-C amplifier, and hence the degree of linearisation required will be realistic. In
The output signal from the non-linear RF amplifier 216 is filtered by an output band pass filter (not shown), and this filter acts to reconstruct the desired, modulated RF waveform, eliminating all unwanted out-of-band products. The amplifier configuration 200 offers substantial benefits over the conventional EER amplifier of FIG. 1. The PWM modulation in configuration 200 is performed at low power hence avoiding the bandwidth restrictions of the (typically) class-D amplifier used to create the high power PWM supply to amplifier 100 in FIG. 1. Further, it is easier to achieve a desirably high sampling rate for the PWM process 219 (which operates at low power) than that used in
In the amplifier configuration 300 of
The conversion process 312 can be performed by real-time calculation or by means of a predetermined look-up table. Advantageously, the predistortion processes 314 and 316 are also implemented using look-up tables. Non-real time feedback may be used to update the digital predistortion look-up tables, as will be described later.
In the introduction, it was mentioned that it is desirable to time-align the amplitude and phase modulation at the switch (224 in FIG. 2). Amplifier configuration 400 of
In
The purpose of this dual artificial delay approach is to greatly reduce the length (and hence physical size) of the analogue delay line 412. Without the digital delay 410 the analogue delay line 412 could extend to many hundreds of meters or more, due to the potentially large delays involved. In the absence of the digital delay 410, it would be impractical to implement a wholly analogue delay and it would also be impractical to adjust such an entirely analogue delay to an accuracy of a few hundred pico-seconds.
Amplifier configuration 500 of
An enhanced version of configuration 500 is illustrated in
It is possible to implement adaptive control of the predistorters used in amplifier configurations 200 to 600. Some examples of adaptive predistortion techniques will now be described.
Amplifier configuration 700 of
In configuration 700, the RF output of the system is sampled at directional coupler 710 and provided to splitter 712. The sampled output is provided to an envelope detector 714 via an attenuator 716. The detected envelope of the (attenuated) output signal sample is supplied (via appropriate ADC) to a control process 718 in the DSP 310. The control process 718 also receives the amplitude component output by conversion process 312. Control process 718 develops an error signal from the difference between its inputs. Control process 718 adjusts the predistortion characteristic of predistorter 314 to minimise the error signal.
The splitter 712 also provides the sampled output signal to phase detector 720 via an attenuator 722. The phase detector 720 uses a signal from channel synthesiser 724 at the wanted output channel frequency in conjunction with the attenuated output signal sample to produce a phase error signal. The phase error signal is fed to the controller where it is corrected to compensate for the pure time-delay of the amplifier 216. The control process 726 adapts the predistortion characteristic predistorter 316 to minimise the compensated error.
The control processes 718 and 726 may be implemented either wholly or partially in the analogue domain, using known techniques. Similarly, the predistorters 314 and 316 can be implemented using conventional methodology.
The sampled output signal is also supplied to an envelope detector 814 (via an attenuator). The detected envelope of the output signal is supplied to the inverting input of an op-amp 816. The detected envelope of the input signal is supplied to the non-inverting input of the op-amp 816. The output of the op-amp 816 is used as a corrected amplitude modulation information signal for generating the binary signal in the PWM process.
In the amplifier configuration 900 of
The RF input signal is supplied to a limiter 914 which outputs a corresponding constant-envelope, phase-modulated signal. The phase modulation of this signal is detected by phase detector 916. The phase modulation information output by phase detector 916 is predistorted by predistorter 918 and used to drive phase modulator 920 operating on the constant-envelope, phase-modulated signal output by limiter 914. The predistorter 918 operating on the phase modulation information output by phase detector 916 is adapted to cause phase modulator 920 to minimise phase distortion in the output of amplifier 216.
The adaption of predistorter 918 is performed by controller 922 on the basis of a signal from phase detector 924. Phase detector 924 supplies controller 922 with an error signal derived by comparing the phase of the sampled output signal of amplifier 216 and the phase of the constant-envelope, phase-modulated signal from limiter 914.
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